Comparison of biodiversity of ARMS installed in Jeju Island through metabarcoding technique and morphological classification assay

Title
Comparison of biodiversity of ARMS installed in Jeju Island through metabarcoding technique and morphological classification assay
Author(s)
Yang, Hyun Sung; Yoon, Gun-Tak; Oh, Chul Hong; Park, Heung Sik; Kang, Do Hyung
KIOST Author(s)
Yang, Hyun Sung(양현성)Oh, Chul Hong(오철홍)Park, Heung Sik(박흥식)Kang, Do Hyung(강도형)
Alternative Author(s)
양현성; 오철홍; 박흥식; 강도형
Publication Year
2023-10-24
Abstract
Global warming driven by climate change has negative impacts on marine biodiversity. Jeju Island has been suggested as an area capable of supporting the high biodiversity of its geographical position and the different currents influencing the marine environment around the island. Jeju is located within temperate latitudes but borders to environmental changes, providing an ideal testbed for assessments of life under rapid climate change. However, a significant limitation of monitoring programs is the difficulty in comparing and quantifying results generated by different methods. The MarineGEO program developed a quantitative, standardized method of sampling monitoring data called Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures (ARMS). We deployed ARMS units in Jeju (Kangjung, Bomok, and Seongsan) in 2018. After 12 months, the ARMS were retrieved, and DNA and morphological assay conducted a taxonomic analysis determining the marine biodiversity. Through genetic analysis and morphological classification of each site, 158~265 and 104~130 species were classified, respectively. So far, we found new Osctracoda species and unrecorded gastropod species from the ARMS units. We expect this baseline data will provide further information to detect “climate refugees,” i.e., newly extended species due to climate change and species new to the science of understudied taxa. These “climate refugees” would disturb marine ecosystems as they compete with indigenous marine organisms. Besides investigating changes in marine ecosystems caused by climate change and detecting invasive marine species, this standardized monitoring method (ARMS) is applied to understand the role of biodiversity in sustaining resilient coastal marine ecosystems under climate threat.
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/44807
Bibliographic Citation
PICES-2023 Annual Meeting, pp.75, 2023
Publisher
The North Pacific Marine Science Organization (PICES)
Type
Conference
Language
English
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